932 resultados para Riparian Vegetation
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The need of more macrofossils to model late-quaternary vegetation is emphasized in the light of Iberian palaeobotanical data
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Ejemplos de cómo los macrorrestos ayudan a mejorar la interpretación del paisaje vegetal de la península Ibérica
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The Iberian pig valued natural resources of the pasture when fattened in mountain. The variability of acorn production is not contained in any line of Spanish agricultural insurance. However, the production of arable pasture is covered by line insurance number 133 for loss of pasture compensation. This scenario is only contemplated for breeding cows and brave bulls, sheep, goats and horses, although pigs are not included. This insurance is established by monitoring ten-day composites Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) measured by satellite over treeless pastures, using MODIS TERRA satellite. The aim of this work is to check if we can use a satellite vegetation index to estimate the production of acorns.
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En esta memoria de Tesis Doctoral se aborda el estudio paleobotánico de seis yacimientos tobáceos situados en las localidades burgalesas de Tubilla del Agua, Sedano, Herrán, Tobera y Frías, y en la alavesa de Ocio. El registro fósil encontrado en estos afloramientos se analiza de forma conjunta con el objetivo de conocer la evolución de la vegetación en el sector biogeográfico Castellano Cantábrico. Este sector se considera el territorio para el cual los hallazgos paleobotánicos son representativos y extrapolables, en tanto que constituye una región homogénea desde el punto de vista florístico, que abarca todos los yacimientos prospectados. El contexto temporal en el que se enmarca este estudio es el final del Cuaternario, desde el Pleistoceno Medio hasta la actualidad. Este intervalo se ha establecido a partir de la edad de los depósitos estudiados, la cual ha sido determinada —para los yacimientos de los que no se disponía de edades fiables— mediante la datación de muestras extraídas de las diferentes unidades litológicas identificadas. Para ello han sido empleadas las técnicas de carbono-14, desequilibrio de las series del uranio y racemización de aminoácidos. Los resultados geocronológicos obtenidos junto con el análisis geomorfológico de los yacimientos han permitido vincular la génesis de las 13 unidades litológicas identificadas con diferentes estadíos climáticos. Estos abarcan un amplio rango de condiciones ambientales, desde las más extremas del Último Máximo Glacial, hasta las más benignas de los Estadíos Isotópicos Marinos interglaciares 1 y 5. Como resultado de la prospección de los depósitos de toba fueron recuperados 1.820 fósiles, la mayoría impresiones foliares, pero también moldes de estróbilos femeninos, ramas y corteza, así como 42 carbones y restos subfósiles de Pinus sp. La identificación taxonómica de estos restos se ha realizado fundamentalmente a partir del análisis de caracteres diagnósticos morfológicos. Como resultado de ello, han sido descritos 28 taxones pertenecientes a las subclases Bryidae, Polypodiidae, Pinidae y Magnoliidae. La flora de los yacimientos estudiados se puede clasificar en tres grupos en función de sus requerimientos ecológicos: (i) uno formado por dos especies de alta tolerancia a la continentalidad —Pinus nigra y Quercus faginea—, las cuales aparecen bien representadas en la mayoría de los depósitos; (ii) otro constituido fundamentalmente por un conjunto de árboles y arbustos que habitualmente tienen el papel de especies acompañantes en los bosques ibéricos submediterráneos y eurosiberianos; y (iii) un tercer grupo compuesto por taxones hidrófitos o edafohigrófilos asociados al ecosistema del fitohermo activo y la vegetación de ribera. En el capítulo de Discusión se propone y analiza la hipótesis de que P. nigra y Q. faginea habrían sido las especies protagonistas de la vegetación zonal del sector Castellano Cantábrico durante el Cuaternario Final. Estas podrían haber persistido como tal incluso durante las épocas más frías, debido a su amplia valencia ecológica y a la capacidad de reproducirse vegetativamente en el caso del quejigo. Por el contrario, los taxones mesofíticos y eurosiberianos pudieron haber sufrido la expansión y retracción de sus poblaciones al ritmo de las oscilaciones climáticas. Sin embargo, la orografía diversa del sector Castellano Cantábrico proporciona emplazamientos en los que se combinan las diversas variables fisiográficas, de tal forma que pudieron haber existido microrrefugios en los que encontraron cobijo algunos taxones mesotérmicos y eurosiberianos durante los periodos glaciales. Por último, la historia evolutiva reciente de la vegetación de este territorio ha estado marcada por la acción antrópica, la cual empezó a ser manifiesta a partir del Neolítico. Esta se tradujo en la degradación y reducción de la cubierta forestal, así como en la extinción del pino laricio del Sector Castellano Cantábrico en los dos últimos milenios. ABSTRACT This PhD Dissertation focuses in the study of six tufa formations located nearby the villages of Tubilla del Agua, Sedano, Herrán, Tobera y Frías, all of them in the province of Burgos, and Ocio, which belongs to the province of Álava. We analyze the palaeobotanical archives of these sites with the purpose of unveiling and understanding the evolution of the vegetation of the Castilian Cantabrian biogeographical sector. This area is considered to be the territory that is represented in the palaeobotanical sample of the studied tufa archives. It is the homogeneous phitogeographical area with the lowest rank that include all the sites. The time frame of this study is the last part of the Quaternary, since the Middle Pleistocene to the present time. This interval is defined by the age of the tufa deposits, which were dated —for the ones that there were not available datings— throughout the analysis of 20 tufa samples taken from the 13 identified lithostratigraphic units. The age of the samples has been determined by using the methods of radiocarbon, U-Th dating and amino acid racemization. Chronological results, along with the chronostratigraphic study of the sites has allowed us to relate the build-up of the 13 identified lithostratigraphic units with different climatic stages. These structures were deposited in a wide range of climatic conditions, from the most extreme ones of the Last Glacial Maximum, to the warmer ones of the Marine Isotopic Stages 1 and 5. A total of 1,820 fossils were recovered from the tufa deposits, most of them were leaf impressions, but also pine cones, branches and bark moulds, along with charcoal and Pinus nigra macro remains. The taxonomical identification of these remains has been done mainly through the analysis of morphological traits. As a result of this process, 28 taxa belonging to the subclass of Bryidae, Polypodiidae, Pinidae and Magnoliidae were identified. The persistency of some taxa can be traced along different climatic stages in this fossil record. This fossil flora can be classified in three different groups: (i) the first one would be composed of two species with high continental climate tolerance —Pinus nigra y Quercus faginea—, which can be found in most of the deposits, (ii) the second group would be mostly formed by trees and shrubs that usually grow in the Iberian forests as an accessory species and (iii) the third one is composed of hydrophytes or hydrophilic taxa associate to the streams, riparian zones or the active tufa ecosystem. In the Discussion chapter we propose and analyse the hypothesis that P.nigra and Q. faginea were the main species of the zonal vegetation of the Castilian Cantabrian biogeographical sector during the last part of the Quaternary. This species could have persisted due to their wide ecological amplitude and also due to the capacity of asexual reproduction in the cases of the oak. On the other hand, mesophitic taxa could have suffered the retraction and expansion of their population following the climate oscillations. However, the diverse orography of the Castilian Cantabrian biogeographical sector provides a variety of combinations of physiographic variables, which could have been suitable refuges for some of the mesophitic taxa. The recent evolutionary history of the vegetation in this territory has been affected by human activities, which started to be relevant since the Neolithic. This led to a reduction of the forests and eventually, to the extinction of P. nigra in the Castilian Cantabrian biogeographical sector in the last two thousands of years.
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Peer reviewed
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This capstone explores vegetation changes in the Okavango Delta area of Botswana. Spatial analyses were conducted using Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer Normalized Difference Vegetation Index satellite imagery and Geographic Information System land management data to compare vegetation changes within managed areas to determine whether management practices have had beneficial or adverse impacts. Rainfall, logging, and livestock data were utilized to attempt to find a link to precipitation, logging, or overgrazing. After analysis the livestock data were the only one that showed a correlation to the vegetation changes observed. Of the vegetation cover types analyzed, forest showed the most change, a significant decrease. Little difference in vegetation changes was found in the managed areas, indicating that land management techniques are ineffective.
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The Denver metropolitan area is facing rapid population growth that increases the stress on already limited resources. Research and advanced computer modeling show that trees, especially those in urban areas, have significant environmental benefits. These benefits include air quality improvements, energy savings, greenhouse gas reduction, and possible water conservation. This Capstone Project applies statistical methods to analyze a small data set of residential homes and their energy and water consumption, as a function of their individual landscape. Results indicate that tree shade can influence water conservation, and that irrigation methods can be an influential factor as well. The Capstone is a preliminary analysis for future study to be performed by the Institute for Environmental Solutions in 2007.
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We examined distribution and breeding success of semi-colonial Montagu’s Harriers (Circus pygargus) in relation to habitat in Castellón province (eastern Spain). Breeding areas used by harriers at a 1-km2 scale were characterised by having intermediate percentages of scrub cover, their nesting habitat, and also had intermediate coverage of herbaceous crops and non-irrigated orchards. Out of all habitat variables considered, only the percentage of herbaceous crops within 500 m from individual nests had a positive and significant effect on breeding output of the species, suggesting that this habitat may be efficiently used by harriers to forage. Breeding output was also related to laying date and number of breeding neighbours within 500 m around nests, with pairs laying later and having a higher number of breeding neighbours showing lower fledged brood sizes. Number of neighbours (but not laying date) was positively related to scrub cover within 500 m and to cover of herbaceous crops within 2,000 m. Conservation actions for Montagu’s Harrier in the study area should be aimed at preserving areas of scrub with nearby presence of herbaceous crops or natural grasslands. However, habitat improvement for semi-colonial species such as Montagu’s Harrier may not result in a change of species distribution area, and good habitat areas may remain unoccupied, as social factors like presence of conspecifics play an important role in breeding area selection for these species.
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Conceptual frameworks of dryland degradation commonly include ecohydrological feedbacks between landscape spatial organization and resource loss, so that decreasing cover and size of vegetation patches result in higher water and soil losses, which lead to further vegetation loss. However, the impacts of these feedbacks on dryland dynamics in response to external stress have barely been tested. Using a spatially-explicit model, we represented feedbacks between vegetation pattern and landscape resource loss by establishing a negative dependence of plant establishment on the connectivity of runoff-source areas (e.g., bare soils). We assessed the impact of various feedback strengths on the response of dryland ecosystems to changing external conditions. In general, for a given external pressure, these connectivity-mediated feedbacks decrease vegetation cover at equilibrium, which indicates a decrease in ecosystem resistance. Along a gradient of gradual increase of environmental pressure (e.g., aridity), the connectivity-mediated feedbacks decrease the amount of pressure required to cause a critical shift to a degraded state (ecosystem resilience). If environmental conditions improve, these feedbacks increase the pressure release needed to achieve the ecosystem recovery (restoration potential). The impact of these feedbacks on dryland response to external stress is markedly non-linear, which relies on the non-linear negative relationship between bare-soil connectivity and vegetation cover. Modelling studies on dryland vegetation dynamics not accounting for the connectivity-mediated feedbacks studied here may overestimate the resistance, resilience and restoration potential of drylands in response to environmental and human pressures. Our results also suggest that changes in vegetation pattern and associated hydrological connectivity may be more informative early-warning indicators of dryland degradation than changes in vegetation cover.
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Global air surface temperatures and precipitation have increased over the last several decades resulting in a trend of greening across the Circumpolar Arctic. The spatial variability of warming and the inherent effects on plant communities has not proven to be uniform or homogeneous on global or local scales. We can apply remote sensing vegetation indices such as the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to map and monitor vegetation change (e.g., phenology, greening, percent cover, and biomass) over time. It is important to document how Arctic vegetation is changing, as it will have large implications related to global carbon and surface energy budgets. The research reported here examined vegetation greening across different spatial and temporal scales at two disparate Arctic sites: Apex River Watershed (ARW), Baffin Island, and Cape Bounty Arctic Watershed Observatory (CBAWO), Melville Island, NU. To characterize the vegetation in the ARW, high spatial resolution WorldView-2 data were processed to create a supervised land-cover classification and model percent vegetation cover (PVC) (a similar process had been completed in a previous study for the CBAWO). Meanwhile, NDVI data spanning the past 30 years were derived from intermediate resolution Landsat data at the two Arctic sites. The land-cover classifications at both sites were used to examine the Landsat NDVI time series by vegetation class. Climate variables (i.e., temperature, precipitation and growing season length (GSL) were examined to explore the potential relationships of NDVI to climate warming. PVC was successfully modeled using high resolution data in the ARW. PVC and plant communities appear to reside along a moisture and altitudinal gradient. The NDVI time series demonstrated an overall significant increase in greening at the CBAWO (High Arctic site), specifically in the dry and mesic vegetation type. However, similar overall greening was not observed for the ARW (Low Arctic site). The overall increase in NDVI at the CBAWO was attributed to a significant increase in July temperatures, precipitation and GSL.
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The aim of this thesis was to evaluate historical change of the landscape of Madeira Island and to assess spatial and temporal vegetation dynamics. In current research diverse “retrospective techniques”, such as landscape repeat photography, dendrochronology, and research of historical records were used. These, combined with vegetation relevés, aimed to gather information about landscape change, disturbance history, and vegetation successional patterns. It was found that landscape change, throughout 125 years, was higher in the last five decades manly driven by farming abandonment, building growth and exotic vegetation coverage increase. Pristine vegetation was greatly destroyed since early settlement and by the end of the nineteenth century native vegetation was highly devastated due to recurrent antropogenic disturbances. These actions also helped to block plant succession and to modify floristical assemblages, affecting as well as species richness. In places with less hemeroby, although significant growth of vegetation of lower seral stages was detected, the vegetation of most mature stages headed towards unbalance between recovery and loss, being also very vulnerable to exotic species encroachment. Recovery by native vegetation also occurred in areas formerly occupied by exotic plants and agriculture but it was almost negligible. Vegetation recovery followed the successional model currently proposed, attesting the model itself. Yet, succession was slower than espected, due to lack of favourable conditions and to recurrent disturbances. Probable tempus of each seral stage was obtained by growth rates of woody taxa estimated through dendrochronology. The exotic trees which were the dominant trees in the past (Castanea sativa and Pinus pinaster) almost vanished. Eucalyptus globulus, the current main tree of the exotic forest is being replaced by other cover types as Acacia mearnsii. The latter, along with Arundo donax, Cytisus scoparius and Pittosporum undulatum are currently the exotic species with higher invasive behaviour. However, many other exotic species have also proved to be highly pervasive and came together with the ones referred above to prevent native vegetation regeneration, to diminish biological diversity, and to block early successional phases delaying native forest recovery.